Spencer v. Patten

35 A. 1097, 84 Md. 414, 1896 Md. LEXIS 119
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 3, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 35 A. 1097 (Spencer v. Patten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spencer v. Patten, 35 A. 1097, 84 Md. 414, 1896 Md. LEXIS 119 (Md. 1896).

Opinion

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellees sued the appellants, Philip M. Spencer and Jarrett Spencer, in Harford County, and the case was removed to Howard County. On the 28th day of March, 1896, a jury was sworn in the Circuit Court for the latter county to try the issues joined, and on April 9, 1896, there was a “ motion to amend declaration and to strike out the names of Philip M. Spencer and Jarrett Spencer, two of the defendants, from the writ and all subsequent proceedings in this case.” The next entry appearing on the very imper-[420]*420feet record before us is, “ Same day amended declaration filed as follows ; ” and a declaration against these appellants • is then set out, which contains three counts, all of which are to the same effect, excepting the trespasses are alleged to have taken place in different years.

A demurrer was filed to the declaration, but it was not pressed in this Court. The defendants filed on the same day, April 9, 1896, a plea in abatement to the amended declaration, which is set out in the record with the following entry just below it: “ Motion ne recipiatur to said first plea and motion granted.” On the same day four pleas in bar,' marked second, third, fourth and fifth pleas to the amended declaration, were filed. The second was the general issue plea, and the third, fourth and fifth were demurred to,- and the demurrers were sustained. On the 16th day of April, 1896, two other pleas marked the sixth and seventh were filed, and there is an entry in the record, “ demurrer to the sixth plea and motion ne recipiatur to the seventh plea. . Demurrer and motion ne recipiatur sustained.” On the 17th day of April there was a verdict for the plaintiffs, and after a motion for a new trial was overruled judgment was entered thereon and an appeal taken. The record shows that exceptions had been taken during the trial, but as they are not in the record we are confined in our inquiries to the questions ■ presented by. the rulings of the Court below on the pleas.

The first point urged in this Court is in reference to the ruling on the first plea, which was filed in behalf of all the defendants, and alleges that at the time of the issuing of the summons in the case “ another suit or action was pending in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City in this State, in which the said plaintiffs in this case are plaintiffs against Joseph E.’ Spencer and J. Herman, two of the defendants to this suit (and one Jarrett Spencer), on the same causes of action in said amended declaration mentioned and described, and which said suit is pending at this time.” There is nothing in the record concerning the action of the [421]*421Court as to this plea excepting the entry above mentioned. It was stated in argument that the motion was granted on the ground that the plea was filed too late, and we assume that to be correct. It is well settled that a plea in abatement cannot be pleaded after a plea in bar has been filed, unless the facts relied on to abate the action arise after-wards. If it be conceded, as contended by the appellants, that a plea in bar only waives matter in abatement then existing and of which the party was aware at the time when his plea in bar was filed, this additional qualification cannot aid the appellants, as the plea does not allege that they were not aware of the facts stated when they filed the plea in bar. But it is contended that when the plaintiffs amended their declaration the defendants were required to plead to the amended declaration, and therefore could then file the plea in abatement. The case of Chapman v. Davis, 4 Gill, 166, is a complete answer to that contention. There a plea in abatement alleging a variance between the writ and declaration was tendered, but the Court refused to receive it, because the defendant had previously filed the general issue plea. Afterwards a demurrer to the declaration was entered and sustained and the plaintiff filed an amended declaration. The defendant again tendered his plea in abatement, but the Court below refused to receive it and the Court of Appeals sustained that ruling. Judge Martin, in delivering the opinion, said : “ As the variance which the defendant has presented as pleadable in abatement existed equally between the writ and original declaration and the writ and the amended declaration, the amendment of the narr. and the rule to plead anew could not in this respect change the rights of the parties. The matter relied on in abatement existed at the period when the plea in bar was filed, and although the leave granted to plead de novo gives to the defendant the right to plead any plea to the action which he may select, it does not confer the right to raise dilatory objections, of which the party was aware when he exhibited his plea in bar and which he had thus surrendered.”

[422]*422In this case the plea was as applicable in a suit against the six original defendants as it was against the remaining four after the declaration was amended by striking out two. It is said by the appellants that they could not have filed this plea to -the original declaration because it was for a trespass committed by the four appellants, jointly with Philip and Jarrett Spencer, whilst now the suit is only against the appellants for a joint trespass committed by them, and therefore a different cause of action from the one in the original declaration. If that reasoning be correct how can it be said, as this plea does, that a suit against Joseph. E. Spencer, J. Herman Spencer and Jarrett Spencer was on the same cause of action as that alleged against these four appellants ? It is stated in the appellants’ brief that the evidence showed there were two sets of alleged trespasses—one committed by the appellants alone and the other by Philip and Jarrett Spencer, and for that reason the plaintiffs amended by striking out one set of trespasses. If that be correct, it is manifest that a suit for a joint tres- . pass by Joseph, J. Herman and Jarrett Spencer would not abate this suit. It is certainly true that a suit for a joint ■trespass against those three would have been as much a matter of abatement in the original suit, to which those three and three others were parties, as in the action now prosecuted where two of the three and two others are defendants. The law does not tolerate the interposition of a dilatory plea at such a time and under such circumstances as was attempted here. The' record does not show when the original suit was brought, but it does show that the plea was tendered after the case had been removed from Harford to Howard County, and on the twelfth day after the jury was impanelled. The rule requiring dilatory pleas of this character to be filed promptly is an important one in the administration of justice—not only to save costs and prevent surprise to litigants, but to save the time of the Courts from being uselessly occupied and thereby avoid unnecessary expenditures of the public money in paying jurors and other Court expenses.

[423]*423We have not thought it necessary to discuss the form of this plea. We will only add that we do not think the practice adopted in bringing the question before us is the proper one. The motion ne recipiatur is presumbly made before a plea is filed and made part of the record. A better practice would therefore be to present the question by a bill of exceptions.

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Bluebook (online)
35 A. 1097, 84 Md. 414, 1896 Md. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spencer-v-patten-md-1896.